第27章
- Ballads of Peace in War
- 佚名
- 157字
- 2015-12-20 11:45:16
THE TREE IN THE TENEMENT YARD
(For T. A. Daly)
America, Ireland and Italy, All have known this poor old tree.
* * *
A rickety fence goes round the yard And the noisy streets stand high:
The grassless ground is brown and hard, And the cinder pathways, lined with shard, Sees but a bit of sky.
Once the yard was fertile and fair, And lilac bushes near:
And a Yankee counted with fretful care, Under the solacing shadows there, The gain of every year.
The crowded walls of trade arose And gloomed the avenue:
But a Munster man at each day's close Built in the tree his hope's rainbows, And saw his dreams come true.
The years have thickened the darkened air, But the tree is still on guard:
It comforts the young Italian there, Who sees the future blossoming fair >From the tree in the tenement yard.
* * *
America, Ireland and Italy All have loved this poor old tree.
- The Four Million
- The Ancien Regime
- At the Back of the North Wind
- Thoughts on the Present Discontents
- London in 1731
- The Task and Other Poems
- Their Wedding Journey
- Underwoods
- Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit etc
- On the Parts of Animals
- The Rhythm of Life
- THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY
- In the Shadow of the Glen
- T. Tembarom
- The Bhagavad-Gita